Lecture
Senghor and the "Civilisation de L'universel"
2011-12-05 - 2011-12-07
→ go to http://www.goethe.de/ins/pt/lis/ver/de8451239v.htm
Keynote lecture by Hans Belting in the frame of the conference:
MODERNITIES IN THE MAKING
International Conference
Dakar, Senegal
Coordinator: Manthia Diawara | Co-Coordinators: Joachim Bernauer, Jürgen Bock, Oumar Ndao
Production and Organization: Goethe-Institut | Co-Production: Maumaus School of Visual Arts, Lisbon _ The Institute of African American Affairs at New York University | Cooperation: Maison de la Culture Douta Seck, Dakar | DEC Ville de Dakar | Université Cheikh Anta Diop, Dakar | Dak’Art Biennale des Arts de Dakar | Marseille-Provence 2013 Capitale Européenne de la Culture | Centre d’Études Africaines de l’EHESS, Paris | Akademie der Kü̈nste, Berlin
Conference Location: Maison de la Culture Douta Seck
Avenue Blaise Diagne x Rue 25 | Médina | 7559 Dakar
Tel.: +221 33 822 36 59
Simultaneous translation French/English
Introduction
The primary objective motivating this conference is to cast a critical eye on Africa’s place in modernity and its role in the making of the complex and evolving identities of Europe today. Our ambition is to look at the challenges to a monolithic European definition of modernity, which has implications in our definitions of culture, aesthetics, and the current debates around Europe, immigration, and the global financial and economic crisis. If debating alternative modernities has become one of the possible outcomes of globalization, this turn also calls for the rethinking of the ways in which contemporary art is classified, practiced, and exhibited, both in Africa and Europe, considering the complex system of exchanges, circulations, and overlapping appropriations.
Our interest goes beyond contesting the once prevalent perception of Africa and the people of African descent in Europe as passive agents of modernity, merely colonized or discriminated against. The outcome of an impressive array of historical and literary studies in the last three decades shows that transnational and diasporic African theorists, such as Leopold Sedar Senghor, Aimé Césaire, Frantz Fanon, and Édouard Glissant, had actively sought to and succeeded in ruffling and shaping the “incomplete project of modernity” in Europe and elsewhere by their literary, philosophical and sociological studies.
To look at Europe through the prisms of African theorists is also to look at how distinct forms and readings of modernity have emerged in Africa itself, and how they have shaped, and may still shape, alternative modernities in Europe. Whereas for some scholars these interventions amount to no more than a sideshow, our conference is committed to an alternative vision, through which we labor to compose suitable and productive genealogies for the ubiquitous phenomena of “Africa in Europe” today. To look at Europe through Africa is to consider the possibility that these African “rhizomes” have enriched Europeanness, without destroying or obstructing its distinctive trait and heritage. It seems therefore appropriate to reexamine here the notions of cultural symbiosis, metissage and creolization, as well as other forms of identification in a Europe that is still (and will always be) in the making, like any other continent. Furthermore, the conference commits itself to the analysis of the distinctive challenges Africa poses to modern cognitive systems and rationalities that authorize and sustain the central political ideas and ideologies of Europe, such as secularism, liberal democracy, transparency and human rights. We intend to debate how modern Europe is coming to grips with massive immigration, the roles played by European minorities in the formation of new public spheres, and the relations between minorities and majorities around such key phenomena as assimilation, multiculturalism, and diversity.
The three-day-conference is composed by three keynote lectures and four panels that are meant to instigate controversy and discussion. The first day with its topic, “Redefining Europe in Modernity,” encourages the rethinking and reimagining of Europe by rereading the texts of some of Africa’s most important intellectuals. The often unexpected originality of their theories might yield a visionary understanding of the current crisis besieging the economies and identities of Europe. The topic of the second day, “Redefining Africa in Modernity”, leads to the critical reexamination of modernities in Africa by juxtaposing different and conflicting concepts and experiences of modernity, and their impact on democracy, migration, and identities. Ultimately, the aim of this conference is to discuss the questions of modernities in order to refresh the current theoretical and curatorial approaches to contemporary art. Thus, on the third day with its topic “Africa in Europe, Europe in Africa”, the debate will be focused around the need, if there is any, to reconsider definitions of art in an interconnected world, in times of uneven globalization and its intricate impact on curatorial practices. The idea for this conference in Dakar was developed by a transnational research group on “Modernities in the Making – Contemporary Art in Africa and Europe” during its first meeting at the Goethe-Institut in Lisbon, Portugal, in March 2011. It shall be complemented by a second conference in the midst of 2012 in Berlin, Germany, focusing on Art and Cinema in contemporary Africa and Europe.
Program
REDEFINING EUROPE IN MODERNITY
Day 1 | Monday, 5.12.201109:30 Registration
10:00 Welcoming Remarks
10:30 Film* 1st Part
10:45 SENGHOR AND THE «CIVILISATION DE L’UNIVERSEL»
Postcolonial Europe and AfricaKeynote by Hans Belting, Karlsruhe, Germany
Respondent: Awam Amkpa, New York University, New York, USA
Moderator: Manthia Diawara
12:30 Lunch Break
14:00 EUROPE SEEN BY SENGHOR AND CÉSAIRE
1st Panel Discussion, Moderator: Jean-Paul Colleynv- The School of Senghor and Césaire, or: For a renewal of the project to
emancipate black people, a foundation of democracy
Penda Mbow, Université Cheikh Anta Diop, Dakar, Senegal - Cultural Encounters in the Modern World – The African Experience
Abiola Irele, Kwara State University, Nigeria - Becoming African: Aimé Césaire Between Poetics and Statistics
Akin Adesokan, Indiana University, Bloomington, USA
16:00 Coffee Break
16:30 EUROPE SEEN BY FANON, CABRAL, GLISSANT
2nd Panel Discussion, Moderator: Oumar Ndao- Frantz Fanon, James Baldwin and Édouard Glissant and the European ideal
Françoise Vergès, CPMHE, Paris, France - Amílcar Cabral’s (In)Complete Project Of Modernity
Identity, Citizenship, and Decolonization in Postcolonial Europe
Manuela Ribeiro Sanches, Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal - Glissant and the archipelagic Europe
François Noudelmann, Université Paris VIII, France
18:30 End
REDEFINING AFRICA IN MODERNITY
Day 2 | Tuesday, 6.12.201110:00 Film* 2nd Part
h3. 10:15 DEMOCRACY AND POLITICAL IDENTITY Keynote by Charles Taylor, Montréal, Canada
Respondent: François Noudelmann, Université Paris VIII, France
Moderator: Oumar Ndao
12:00 Lunch Break
14:00 ALTERNATIVE MODERNITIES
3rd Panel Discussion, Moderator: Awam Ampka- Modernity and Modernization
Ideologies and practices in postcolonial Guinea
Télivel Bailo Diallo, Conakry, Guinea - Inculturating Modernity
Felwine Sarr, Université Gaston Berger, Saint-Louis, Senegal - Modernity and the Politics of Disorder
Dilip Gaonkar, Northwestern University, Evanston, USA
16:00 Coffee Break
16:30 Film* 3rd Part
16:45 YOU DON’T HAVE YOUR PLACE HERE IN EUROPE
Keynote by Aminata Dramane Traoré, Bamako, MaliRespondent: Télivel Bailo Diallo, Conakry, Guinea
Moderator: Manthia Diawara and Dilip Gaonkar
18:30 End
AFRICA IN EUROPE, EUROPE IN AFRICA
Day 3 | Wednesday, 7.12.2011h3. 10:00 CURATING MODERINTIES 4th Panel Discussion, Moderator: Ousseynou Wade
- Double Sided Modernities
Ângela Ferreira, Lisboa, Portuga
l - Finding Art Where It Is. Reflections on the displacement of people and works
Jean-Paul Colleyn, EHESS, Paris, France - Africa Exposed – Africa and Self Fashioning
Lydie Diakhaté, Paris/New York, France/USA - Curating Contemporary African Art in a Global World
N’Goné Fall, Paris/Dakar, France/Senegal
12:00 Coffee Break
12:30 CLOSING REMARKS
Manthia Diawara13:00 End
*The Film consists of an Interview with Wole Soyinka, directed by Manthia Diawara [Nov. 2011]
